"In this way the first men were made, and soon they filled the far reaches of the earth. But for a long time they did not know what to do with their noble limbs or the divine spirit which had been breathed into them. They saw, yet they did not see; they heard, yet they did not hear. . . Then Prometheus [Forethought] came to their aid." Gustav Schawab, Die Sagen des Klassischen Altertums, translated by Marx and Morwitz; Pantheon Books

Our First Priority: Climate change is the most important challenge our world has ever faced. Understanding climate change and its solutions are the most important educational challenges we have ever faced.

“Our best hope is that the public become informed and get angry”

Dr. Warren Washington, Senior Researcher at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, spoke these words in 2006, at the ASES conference in Denver, Colorado. That was FIVE years ago -- We are now more than one-half of the way into the ten-year window estimated that we had to make significant changes in our greenhouse-gas emissions.

Gang Up/Join a Tribe: See what others have planned. Try www.350.org. See what others are doing. Try Siemens' We Can Change the World: www.wecanchange.com.

Your Idea Here: You think of something. Post it on your Facebook page.

The preamble explains everything else in the Constitution. And it says: We the People of the United States, in Order to . . . promote the general Welfare . . . do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America. If they are going to carry out this purpose, our representatives have to start by protecting the climate and weather systems that we depend upon.
Paying attention to our own carbon footprints is important, but it isn’t nearly enough*; the system itself has to change ? Just like with civil rights in the 60’s.
In fact, one might argue that having a reasonable future is a type of civil right. And just like the civil rights movement, the power to create change is all yours. . . Whatever you do, Let us know: 10things.fsp@gmail.com. We’ll share.

AND: IN 2012 DON’T FORGET TO VOTE! (Register first! And take someone with you.)

*WHY THESE TEN THINGS?? Because -

We Need to Cut Our Greenhouse Gas Emissions by More than Half!

Even if every individual cuts their own energy use by 10 or 20%, we have to do much, much more to balance out our CO2 emissions. (Year 2008, from LLNL data: https://flowcharts.llnl.gov). In fact, using the target of 350 ppm, we have to reduce our green-house gas emissions to less than a fourth of their current level.

To succeed, we have to go where the biggest problems are: We have to stop coal, make transportation more efficient, recapture energy now wasted, exponentially increase our use of renewables.

In other words, we have to influence the society around us.

Think this is hard? -- Well, many European countries, including Germany and France, are already at half the level per person of the U.S. (In 2007, U.S. CO2 emissions were 19.3 Metric Tons per person; in Germany they were 9.6; in Sweden they were 5.4!) See Emissions by Country, World Bank.

Be Informed, But Don't Get Sucked In: The guys in suits want you to believe that this is a “debate”; that being “prudent” means doing nothing.

And Don't Get Distracted: Ethanol has been blamed for everything from the budget crisis to rising food costs. (What about oil subsidies, or those droughts and floods?) “We’re working on tomorrow’s technology.” (Why don’t we try today’s?) "It would be bad for the economy." (China is now way ahead in solar, in wind, and working on high speed rail, how competitive does that make our economy in the future?)

Old magician’s tricks “Don’t look behind the curtain”.

“We have to have cheap energy.” (Why? ? No one else does. We’re just paying for it in other ways anyway.)

When You Talk to Your Representatives, Ask Them: Ask, Do they “believe” in global warming? How serious do they think it is? (If nine brain surgeons said they had a tumor and needed to take action immediately, but their dentist said it was just normal, what would they do?)
How did they vote on the climate change bill? Why? What are they doing about our emissions this year?

The coal and petroleum industries spend millions on lobbyists (“As the World Burns”, J. Godell, Rolling Stone), but it’s your vote that gets them to Washington. Don’t like their answers? ? replace them.

Check It Out. . . In Your Town: Has your town ever had an energy audit? Do they have budget constraints? Go to a town meeting and ask what the total cost of energy is for the town, from fire trucks to school security lights. Bet they don’t know